Asante Technologies 3524 Series User Manual
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7.3.2 Flow Control
 
With a link operating at a high data rate, a switch may experience occasional limitations in the buffer space 
used to store Ethernet frames before forwarding them. In this situation, if the sending station continues to 
send frames, the switch will have no option but to discard the frames. This may quickly lead to unacceptable 
delays in upper-level protocols. 
 
In order to avoid unnecessarily dropping frames, a switch may implement Flow Control. Flow control is a 
feature that allows the switch to recognize when the buffer space is limited, and to send an Ethernet PAUSE 
frame to its link partner to cease transmission for a specified period. As with a full duplex link, both ends of 
the link must understand flow control for the mechanism to operate properly. 
 
7.3.3 Auto-Negotiation
 
As discussed above, you need to make sure that both ends of a link agree about the duplex and flow control 
settings to be used (as well as the speed of the connection). In even a mid-sized network, making sure that 
all the links agree on all these parameters would be too big a job if the network manager had to configure 
every connection manually. 
 
To make configuration as automatic as possible, the IEEE has defined standards so that most connections 
can be automatically configured by the hardware, without manual intervention. Devices can agree on the 
speed, duplex mode and flow control settings for each individual connection. The possible links states are 
ranked: 
 
1000Mbps/Full Duplex 
1000Mbps/Half Duplex (never used) 
100Mbps/Full Duplex 
100Mbps/Half Duplex 
10Mbps/Full Duplex 
10Mbps/Half Duplex 
 
With auto-negotiation, the link partners will configure the link to operate at the highest speed and duplex 
state that both support. 
 
Auto-negotiation is supported on IntraCore switches on all UTP ports. 
 
Note: If an Ethernet device that is capable of auto-negotiation is connected to a port that has auto-
negotiation turned off, the auto-negotiating device will default to half duplex mode. If the port that is not using 
auto-negotiation is set to full duplex, the link will have a duplex mismatch, and will so slow that it may be 
unusable. If you configure an Ethernet port to operate in full duplex mode, you must also configure the link 
partner to operate in full duplex. It is almost always better to let auto-negotiation take care of this for you. 
